Germany detains key Islamic State suspect
(Vatican Radio) Germany's
police say a Syrian man who was detained after a two-day manhunt appears to
have links to Islamic State group and was preparing a major attack. The arrest
came amid concerns in other European Union member states such as Hungary over a
perceived lack of coordination between counter terrorism authorities.
German officials say key
suspect Jaber al-Bakr, who arrived in Germany as a refugee, was detained in a
flat in the eastern city of Leipzig early on Monday. The man had reportedly
sought help from another Syrian, who alerted police after letting al-Bakr sleep
at his flat.
The hunt began after police
found very volatile explosives at al-Bakr's flat in Chemnitz, south of Leipzig.
In the initial raid in Chemnitz early on Saturday, 22-year-old al-Bakr evaded
capture as officers fired a warning shot in a botched attempt to stop him.
Yet, police managed to detain
three other suspects in connection with a bomb plot allegedly planned by
al-Bakr prompting evacuations, explained Tom Bernhardt, press spokesperson for
the Saxony criminal investigation office. "It is necessary to mention that
we have evacuated people in the area," he added.
"The cordoned-off area
is so wide that we can almost rule out a threat to the local population, which
has co-operated with the police."
MASSIVE ATTACK
With the key suspect now also
in custody, police hope to learn more about what could have been a massive
attack on German soil. Police found a detonator, explosives and a kilo of
chemicals in the Chemnitz flat, and said an explosives belt may have been
nearly ready. Similar explosive were used in the deadly jihadist attacks in
Paris last year and Brussels in March.
However Hungary has suggested
that more coordination is needed between different European authorities to
avoid attacks in the EU. The Hungarian Anti-Terrorism Center (TEK) said it had
eight telephone numbers that were used by terrorists involved in bombings in
Brussels and Paris. Six of these numbers were activated by SIM cards for mobile
phones that were purchased in the name of a homeless person.
Hungarian media reported some
200,000 SIM cards were bought but it remained unclear how many had been taken
by militants.
But TEK claimed that
French and Belgian authorities had not
even noted suspicious calls from Hungarian
telephone numbers and had not informed their Hungarian counterparts
about these suspicion activities.
TEK says 14 of the terrorists
who participated in recent attacks in Paris in November last year which
killed at least 130 people and in Brussels in March that claimed the lives of
32 people from around the world. Hungarian authorities also claim that 14
terror suspects traveled through Hungary between the spring and autumn of 2015.

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